Step 6: Zither Pins

Step 7: Finishing

I had a few pieces of oak lying around, so I cut the tail piece and bridge from them. The tail piece (which I completely over engineered, smaller next...

The Vulcan Lyre, my ultimate testiment to nerdyness. The device one uses when you need to rock out with your Spock out. I must express my gratitude to Michelle my wonderful wife for her help with this project. That she works in a wood shop and knows her way around it has been extremely helpful.

Step 1: Basic Body

First I designed my lyre shape in a vector graphics program. While adobe illustrator would have made more sense I did it with 3d Studio Max, just cause I like how it handles curves. Technically we can shorten this step to "Draw your lyre".

Then I printed the whole thing out. My printer isn't any bigger than yours, so I had to print it out in sections and then tape it all together. Next I cut out the whole shape, taped it to a big piece of 3/4 inch plywood and cut the sucker out. If you are a better free hand drawer than me you could probably skip most of that and just draw on the plywood. I was trying to get mine as close in shape to Spock's as possible so I was a bit anal.

Next I made a copy of it with some more plywood, then glued the halves together with some clamps.

Oh, uh, see that little area at the bottom that isn't cut out? Yeah, that's important, it does stuff. Namely it gives to something to screw the tail piece to.

Step 2: Edges

The edges where rough, being made of cheap plywood, so I puttied them. Some simple off the shelf wood putty did this nicely.

I want to make something like this so bad, (with my own design though) did you use regular guitar strings for this or some special string?The sound was beautiful too, I might turn my instrument's music into mp3s for my video game! awesome tutorial!

My last comment (probably). Instead of taping pieces of the harp template together, it's a lot easier to go to a Kinko's and have the whole thing Xeroxed on one of the big large format copy machines. An 8 x 11 inch page can be easily blown up thee or four hundred times-- even much more-- to make a "life size" copy of the template. This costs about four or five bucks for a 24 x 36 inch copy. To make the neck template for my lyre, I had to blow up the plans 630 per cent to get a 24" neck. It takes a little work (and a tape measure) to get it blown up to the exact size wanted, but you only have to pay for the copies you keep; the ones that came out too small or too large can be thrown away.

It took a long time with no accurate plans,but I think I got it all sussed out now after getting the neck too big for only 19 strings.

The first one is solid walnut with mahogany plywood on the top, the other is plain plywood. I think I'll settle on using ash because it's strong and cheap (but I wish a little less heavy. Almost finished now. When I finally get it done, it will be a thing of beauty.

I lov ethe idea of making your own instruments XD was wondering where you got the zither pins though ^_^ I could do with some myself for my project XD and if I'm allowed may I alter the instructions for my own kind of instrument? Am planning to make my own Guzheng and was kinda getting annoyed when I couldn't find any instructions for them :(

Am really glad you made the Vulcan Lyre as it seemed interesting and looks simple enough for me to make a Guzheng via these simple instructions XD

Hope you'll let me alter the instructions so I can make my own Guzheng ^_^ it much cheaper than buying a full Guzheng made in some other country ((the price for the cheapest Guzhengs are way too high even by British standards!!!))

I don't remember where I got mine, but there's a music supply place that not only sells packages of 100 chrome zither pins for real cheap, but also really cool looking black zither pins.

The Star Trek Tech Manual says the Vulcan harp uses black erandanite pins but since those are a little hard to get here on earth, I use black zither pins instead. They look great especially with colored nylon harp strings and up against a brass fret bar. The fret bar can also be black plastic, and those black zither pins make a good combination.

Anyway, Google "zither pins" and you shouldn't have much trouble finding a supplir of either kind of pins.

Please feel free to use these plans to build any kind of instrument you want. Using the same basic method you could make all sorts of instruments. As for the zither pins you can get them and a lot of other handy stuff here: http://www.harpkit.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=zpin&Category_Code=0007supplies&Product_Count=1

Well, here's mine.At some point I thought it would be smart to have 19 strings, but that left me with little space between the strings to pluck.Also, I put the pin holes on the wrong side, so I have an awkward position playing it.But it turned out pretty good. Thanks for the template.

Your 2nd lyre is a beautiful instrument. Looking at the photo, it almost looks like it's made from one piece; almost like guitar construction. I can see how a top panel can be placed to make it look that way, but it also looks like you covered the neck too?

I've been making mine out of walnut, which is costly, so I am always looking for a better way. Would you say how you got the second lyre to look so elegant?

For the second lyre I covered the whole front and back with a layer of 8th inch plywood rather than a "pickguard" piece of 1/4 inch. This stuff is a higher quality and looks a lot nicer. Also, it was still strong enough to make a decent sound board with a little bracing.

im not much of a star trek fan but did want a lyre harp so i decided to make one in my woodtech class. this one has a little diferent shape but i used the same basic steps when planin how to do mine. i use solid mohogany and routerd out the inside instead of going all the way through. then i put a thin peice of oak flosh with the top over the hole. its not as loud as an acustic guitar but it is a good deal louder than an unamped elictric guitar is. i think its sweet thanks for the idea.

Good work, nice instrument. But, isn't weak the mast for the cords? I would add a (key, derrick, strut, stanchion, pitprop, prop, brace, puncheon, shore. (pardon, I don't speak Emglish)), although that would alter the aesthetic.

The magic of plywood makes this possible. The neck is an inch thick of solid plywood. The layers in plywood are laid perpendicular to each others grain which produces a very strong substance with high sheer resistance. Over the years the neck on my first lyre has warped a little but not much.

I think you are asking if the neck is weak due to it's angle. I designed the shape to match the original prop, but wanted a functional instrument. I got around this by over engineering the body, making it about twice as thick as the original prop, this also gave me enough internal space for a good sized resonating chamber.

I've watched The Way To Eden a couple dozen times now as that episode has the best view of the harp-- you can even see the [Vulcan] speaker on the back if you have a good freeze frame and a quick finger on the button.

From this show it looks like the harp is about 1-1/2 to 2 inches thick, which is a reasonable thickness for an instrument of that type. The Star Trek Technical Manual is deceptive in many ways, so I rely on that show and he photos from it for some sense of size. But, hey; there are about three diferent versions of the harp seen on the show so it only matters to anal people like me who want it down to 100 per cent plus accuracy heh heh. <g>

I loved your instructable when I say it, and I and thought, "I'll make one for my wife this Christmas." She's not much of a Star Trek fan, so I won't tell her of its Vulcan heritage - it looks like a cool exotic instrument and that's enough. I had to make it at work on my lunch times between Thanksgiving and Christmas. It was very easy to make and it sounds great. Nice work to make your instructions easy to understand.

Not sure if I already said this, but if not, it bears repeating: A) Absolutely awesome instrument! Looks better than the original electric ones, imo. B) Absolutely fantastic job both on the construction and the 'ible. C) Thanks so much for posting the mp3, and your playing is great. :) D) You and your wife are awesome.

To be honest, when I first seen the thumbnail for the instructable, I thought he was building some kind of instrument out of some rubber diaphragm or a hot water bottle or something, just the shape and color that it was from afar.

The guy who made the original plans was a bad draftsman; he should've made dimension lines, but I suspect too that maybe he was trying to make money by having you buy two or three of his booklets-- you'd have to, in order to be able to cut out all of those different template pieces. Anyway, after a lot of trial and error and hard work I finally got the one I'm working on down to 47" long x 17" wide with the neck being the longest piece at about 24" long. This is like the version Spock plays in The Way To Eden episode with the space hippies. The one Uhura plays has a shorter neck and a wider body.

I didn't use his plans, though I may have used a picture from them for the basic outline. My lyre body is built of two sheet of plywood rather than the myriad of cuts described in the plans I think you are describing. While the many cuts method would be better for a hardwood lyre, two sheets is easier with plywood. And I have to say that despite it's plywood nature it's remarkably resonant.

At the time, I didn't have a good template and the harp came out {way} too big, but what I used was a 2 foot x 4foot wood panel I got from some company. I had to glue two of them together since 3/4 inch was their biggest thickness, but the results were just as good as plywood but without having to worry about sprucing it up-- and just as good as solid wood but without having to make individual pieces. I don't know if any companies make these wood panels any more in 2 x 4 foot sizes, but if any are available, it's really worth the cost to use pre-cut panels-- especially in light weight woods like hickory, birch, walnut, etc.

About This Instructable

Bio:Question: Who is this D10D3 guy, and what is his deal? Answer: I'm a Maker, a hardware and software hacker, an artist, and general dreamer. I have an insatiable need to build things and modify them....read more »